Thank you for the question.
When we look at the investing in Canada plan, we see there are 21 departments and 90 programs involved, so when you go down to the project level, that will vary depending on the department, the program and how it's managed.
I'll speak to Infrastructure Canada. It doesn't manage projects specifically. Those are managed by municipalities, non-profits and the provinces themselves. We are a cost-sharing funding partner, investing in those particular infrastructure projects.
There can be varied reasons why an infrastructure project does not advance as planned by the proponent. As Ms. Bowers said, it could be a supply chain reason, it could be a labour reason, or it could be a change of decision or prioritization by a particular government why a particular project does not advance as planned.
If that is the case, with Infrastructure Canada, should a municipality, for example, decide to cancel a project because it's not advancing it, if we have advanced any money, that would be reimbursed. We would then put the money back. If it was an integrated bilateral agreement with a particular jurisdiction, it would be available to fund another project.